The plan included a reality show, “Space Champions,” which would chronicle the development of a proprietary sport, first called “Parabolic Football,” or “Paraball,” and then intriguingly changed to, “Zero Gravity Football.” (Was “Paraball” too confusing a term?)

I actually don’t have a direct answer. The company no longer exists, and the corporate charter has been revoked. I suspect the fact that the commercial suborbital space market didn’t mature as quickly as many hoped played a role. Also, the failure of the Rocket Racing League to take off (yet), which is also a “space sport” intended to rally public interest in private space, may have made investors and advertisers hesitant to invest in a “zero-g sport.”

Regardless, perhaps with SpaceShipTwo about ready to fly and XCor’s Lynx right behind, the market may be more fertile for the advent of microgravity sports?